Brown, L.; Cook, G.T.; Mackenzie, A.B.; Thomson, J.. 2001 Radiocarbon age profiles and size dependency of mixing in northeast Atlantic sediments. Radiocarbon, 43 (2B). 929-937.
Abstract
In recent years, the most common technique for radiocarbon dating of deep-ocean sediments has been accelerator
mass spectrometry (AMS) analysis of hand-picked planktonic foraminifera (forams). Some studies have exposed age
offsets between different sediment size fractions from the same depth within a core and this has important implications when
establishing a chronological framework for palaeoceanographic records associated with a particular sediment component.
The mechanisms generating the age offsets are not fully understood, a problem compounded by the fact that the fraction
defined as “large” varies between different studies. To explore this problem, we dated samples of hand-picked forams from
two Biogeochemical Ocean Flux Study (BOFS) cores, for which the presence of an offset between the bulk carbonate and
>150 µm foraminiferal calcite had already been demonstrated. The presence of a constant age offset between bulk carbonate
and coarse fraction material at the two BOFS sites has been confirmed, but the magnitude of the offset is dependent on
whether a simple size-separation technique or hand-picking of well-preserved forams is applied. This may be explained if the
selection of well preserved forams biases the sample towards those specimens that have spent least time in the surface mixed
layer (SML) or have undergone less size selective mixing. Modeling of the 14C profiles demonstrates that SML depth and sediment
accumulation rates are the same for both the bulk and coarse sediment fractions, which is consistent with the hypothesis
that size-selective mixing is responsible for the age offset.
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